Envelopes and thermal radiation - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Envelopes and thermal radiation

Description:

Dong Lai,2 Gilles Chabrier,3 Pawel Haensel,4 and their groups ... Kaon condensation (K-meson-like excitations with strangeness) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:31
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 32
Provided by: msslU
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Envelopes and thermal radiation


1
Envelopes and thermal radiation of neutron stars
with strong magnetic fields Alexander Y.
Potekhin1 in collaboration with D.G.Yakovlev,1
A.D.Kaminker,1 Yu.A.Shibanov,1 ... and Dong
Lai,2 Gilles Chabrier,3 Pawel Haensel,4 and their
groups
1Ioffe Physico-Technical Institute,
St.Petersburg, Russia 2Cornell University,
Ithaca, New York, USA 3Ecole Normale Supérieure
de Lyon, France 4N.Copernicus Astronomical
Center, Warsaw, Poland
  • Importance of neutron-star envelopes
  • Conductivities and thermal structure of the
    crust
  • Atmosphere and spectrum of thermal radiation
  • The effects of superstrong magnetic fields

2
Neutron-star structure
3
Hypotheses about the inner core
4
Some modern models of the EOS of superdense matter
5
Neutron star models
Stellar massradius relation for different
EOSs from Haensel, Potekhin, Yakovlev, Neutron
Stars. 1. Equation of State and Structure
(Springer-Kluwer, to be published)
6
Thermal evolution
Cooling of neutron stars with proton
superfluidity in the cores
Basic cooling curve of a neutron star (no
superfluidity, no exotica)
Neutron star cooling Yakovlev et al. (2005)
Nucl. Phys. A 752, 590c
7
based on Yakovlev et al. (2005) Nucl. Phys. A
752, 590c
8
What is required for interpretation of observed
thermal radiation from neutron stars
  • Relation between internal (core) temperature and
    effective temperature (surface luminosity)
  • requires studying thermal conduction and
    temperature profiles in heat-blanketing envelopes

  • Knowledge of the shape and features of the
    radiation spectrum at given effective temperature
  • requires modeling neutron star surface layers
    and propagation of electromagnetic radiation in
    them

Magnetic field affects thermodynamics properties
and the heat conduction of the plasma, as well
as radiative opacities
9
Neutron-star envelopes
Neutron star structure
10
Neutron-star envelopes
Neutron star structure in greater detail
11
Neutron-star envelopes
Neutron star without atmosphere possible result
of a phase transition
12
Thermal conductivities in a strongly magnetized
envelope
http//www.ioffe.ru/astro/conduct/
Solid exact, dots without T-integration,
dashes magnetically non-quantized Ventura
Potekhin (2001), in The Neutron Star Black Hole
Connection, ed. Kouveliotou et al. (Dordrecht
Kluwer) 393
Heat flux
13
Temperature drops in magnetized envelopes of
neutron stars
based on Potekhin et al. (2003) ApJ 594, 404
14
Configuration of the surface field does not
strongly affect luminosity
Dependence of the mean effective temperature on
the magnetic field strength. for the
light-element (accr.) and iron (Fe)
envelopes. Dot-dashed lines dipole field solid
lines stochastic field. Potekhin, Urpin,
Chabrier (2005) AA 443, 1025
15
Cooling of neutron stars with accreted envelopes
Cooling of neutron stars with magnetized
envelopes
Chabrier, Saumon, Potekhin (2006) J.Phys.A
Math. Gen. 39, 4411 used data from Yakovlev et
al. (2005) Nucl. Phys. A 752, 590c
16
Modeling neutron-star atmospheres Bound species
in a strong magnetic field
The effects of a strong magnetic field on the
atoms and molecules. ac H atom in the ground
state (a Bltlt109 G, b B1010 G, c B1012 G). d
The field stabilizes the molecular chains (H3 is
shown). e H atom moving across the field becomes
decentered.
17
Modeling neutron-star atmospheres Bound species
in a strong magnetic field
an excited state (m5) center-of-mass motion
(motional Stark effect)
the ground state
an excited state
Squared moduli of the wave functions of a
hydrogen atom at B2.35x1011 G Vincke et al.
(1992) J.Phys.B At. Mol. Opt.Phys. 25, 2787
18
Binding energies of the hydrogen atom in the
magnetic field B2.35x1012 G as functions of its
state of motion across the field Potekhin (1994)
J.Phys.B At. Mol. Opt. Phys. 27, 1073
19
Equation of state of hydrogen in strong magnetic
fields The effects of nonideality and partial
ionization
http//www.ioffe.ru/astro/NSG/Hmagnet/
EOS of ideal (dotted lines) and nonideal (solid
lines) H plasmas at various field
strengths Potekhin Chabrier (2004) ApJ 600,
317
20
Partial ionization/recombination in hydrogen
plasmas with strong magnetic fields
21
Plasma absorption and polarizabilities in strong
magnetic fields The effects of nonideality and
partial ionization
Spectral opacities for 3 basic polarizations.
Solid lines taking into account bound states,
dot-dashes full ionization Potekhin Chabrier
(2003) ApJ 585, 955
To the right top panel basic components of
the absorption coefficients middle and bottom
components of the polarizability
tensor Potekhin, Lai, Chabrier, Ho (2004) ApJ
612, 1034
22
Opacities for normal modes in a strongly
magnetized plasma The effects of nonideality
and partial ionization
Opacities for two normal modes of electromagnetic
radiation in models of an ideal fully ionized
(dash-dot) and nonideal partially ionized (solid
lines) plasma at the magnetic field strength
B3x1013 G, density 1 g/cc, and temperature
3.16x105 K. The 2 panels correspond to 2
different angles of propagation with respect to
the magnetic field lines. An upper/lower curve of
each type is for the extraordinary/ordinary
polarization mode, respectively Potekhin, Lai,
Chabrier, Ho (2004) ApJ 612, 1034
23
Result the spectrum
The effect of the atmosphere and its partial
ionization on the spectrum of thermal radiation
of a neutron star with B1013 G, T 106 K (the
field is normal to the surface, the radiation
flux is angle-averaged) Wynn Ho, for Potekhin et
al. (2006) J.Phys.A Math. Gen. 39, 4453
24
New challenges from the superstrong fields (B gt
1014 G)
1. Thermal structure field affects luminosity 2.
Surface layers molecules, chains, and magnetic
condensation 3. Radiative transfer vacuum
polarization and mode conversion 4. Energy
transport below the plasma frequency 5. Non-LTE
distribution of ions over Landau levels
25
Superstrong field affects total luminosity
Dependence of the mean effective temperature on
the magnetic field strength for the
light-element (dashed lines) and iron (solid
lines) envelopes.
26
Radiation from condensed surface
Monochromatic flux from the condensed surface in
various cases Matthew van Adelsberg, for
Potekhin et al. (2006) J.Phys.A Math. Gen. 39,
4453
27
The effect of vacuum polarization
Spectra of fully ionized H atmospheres in a
superstrong magnetic field. The solid line and
dashed line are the atmospheres with vacuum
polarization but no mode conversion and complete
mode conversion the dot-dashed line is the
atmosphere without vacuum polarization, and the
dotted line is for a blackbody Ho et al. (2003)
ApJ 599, 1293
28
Energy transport below the plasma frequency may
affect the spectrum
Spectra (upper panel) and photon-decoupling
densities for X- and O-modes (lower panel) for a
partially ionized H atmosphere. The suppression
of radiation below the plasma energy Epe is
approximately modeled by dashed and dotted lines
in the upper panel Ho et al. (2003) ApJ 599,
1293
29
Energy transport below the plasma frequency can
be important
Photon-decoupling densities for X- and O-modes
for a partially ionized H amosphere, for magnetic
field strengths typical of pulsars (blue lines)
and magnetars (red lines). Dot-dashed lines
correspond to the radiative surface, the shadowed
region corresponds to E lt Epl.
30
Energy transport below the plasma frequency may
affect the temperature profile and Ts
Temperature profiles in the accreted envelope of
a neutron star with ordinary (left panel) and
superstrong (right) magnetic field, for the local
effective temperature 105.5 K, with (solid lines)
and without (dashed lines) plasma-frequency
cut-off Potekhin et al. (2003) ApJ 594, 404
31
Superstrong field may lead to non-LTE effects
Population of proton Landau level N1 relative to
N0 as function of mass density for different
values of B and T Lai Potekhin, in
preparation
32
Conclusions
  • In order to link neutron-star observations with
    theoretical models of ultradense matter, one
    needs to model heat diffusion and formation of
    thermal radiation spectrum, which requires
    knowledge of thermodynamic and kinetic properties
    of nonideal, strongly magnetized plasmas in
    neutron star envelopes.
  • Practical models of the electron conductivities,
    EOS, and opacities of strongly magnetized
    plasmas, applicable to neutron stars, are
    developed in recent years. This allows us to
    model neutron-star thermal spectra which can be
    used for interpretation of observations.
  • Magnetic fields of ordinary pulsars are not very
    important for the cooling, regardless of the
    field scale at the surface. However, they can be
    important for modeling the spectrum and
    evaluation of the effective temperature from
    observations.
  • A superstrong magnetic field (1) accelerates
    cooling at late epochs and (2) leads to
    theoretical uncertainties in modeled spectra,
    which require further study.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com